4.7 Article

Integrative Proteome and Phosphoproteome Profiling of Early Cold Response in Maize Seedlings

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23126493

Keywords

maize; cold stress; TMT-labeling; proteome; phosphoproteome; seedlings; photosynthesis; spliceosome

Funding

  1. Research Foundation of Education Bureau of Hunan Province, China [20B293]
  2. National Basic Research Program of China [2013CB127101]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31501766, 31401925]
  4. State Key Laboratory for Managing Biotic and Chemical Threats to the Quality and Safety of Agro-Products, Zhejiang Academy of Agricultural Sciences

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This study investigates the molecular mechanism of cold adaptation in maize by analyzing the proteome and phosphoproteome levels of maize seedlings under cold shock. The results reveal the early molecular events associated with cold response in maize, including changes in photosynthesis proteins, spliceosome proteins, kinases, and transcriptional factors. The study provides valuable insights into how C-4 plants respond to sudden temperature drops.
Cold limits the growth and yield of maize in temperate regions, but the molecular mechanism of cold adaptation remains largely unexplored in maize. To identify early molecular events during cold shock, maize seedlings were treated under 4 degrees C for 30 min and 2 h, and analyzed at both the proteome and phosphoproteome levels. Over 8500 proteins and 19,300 phosphopeptides were quantified. About 660 and 620 proteins were cold responsive at protein abundance or site-specific phosphorylation levels, but only 65 proteins were shared between them. Functional enrichment analysis of cold-responsive proteins and phosphoproteins revealed that early cold response in maize is associated with photosynthesis light reaction, spliceosome, endocytosis, and defense response, consistent with similar studies in Arabidopsis. Thirty-two photosynthesis proteins were down-regulated at protein levels, and 48 spliceosome proteins were altered at site-specific phosphorylation levels. Thirty-one kinases and 33 transcriptional factors were cold responsive at protein, phosphopeptide, or site-specific phosphorylation levels. Our results showed that maize seedlings respond to cold shock rapidly, at both the proteome and phosphoproteome levels. This study provides a comprehensive landscape at the cold-responsive proteome and phosphoproteome in maize seedlings that can be a significant resource to understand how C-4 plants respond to a sudden temperature drop.

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